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1 get over
تَعَافَى (مِن) \ recover: to become well again (after illness or shock); get back to a former good condition (after trouble): She recovered from the fever. His business never recovered from the effects of war. recuperate: to rest and get strong again, after an illness or accident, etc.. get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. -
2 get over
1) to recover from (an illness, surprise, disappointment etc):يَشْفى من، يَتَعافىI can't get over her leaving so suddenly.
2) to manage to make (oneself or something) understood:يجعَلُ الشيءَ مَفهوماWe must get our message over to the general public.
يَعْمل شيئا لا يُحِبُّهI'm not looking forward to this meeting, but let's get it over (with).
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3 get over
تَخَلَّصَ مِن \ banish: to put sth. out of one’s mind: She could not banish her grief for her dead child. dispose: (with of) to get free (of sth. unwanted) by selling it, throwing it away or dealing with it in any way: If the box is empty, you can dispose of it. do away with: to put an end to (sth. old and useless): Such customs should be done away with. dump: to throw away (sth. large and unwanted): Where shall I dump this broken chair. get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. get rid of: free oneself of: How can I get rid of these unwelcome visitors?. stamp out: to put an end to (sth. dangerous or evil): We must stamp out this disease before it spreads. \ See Also طرد (طَرَدَ)، ألغى (أَلْغَى)، قَضَى على -
4 get over
تَغَلَّبَ \ to get the better of: to get control of; win against: He got the better of his fears. come through, get through, pass through: to pass successfully (an exam, a dangerous or difficult position, etc.). get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. overcome: to deal successfully with (a fault or difficulty); conquer. \ See Also تَفَوّق على -
5 get rid of
تَخَلَّصَ مِن \ banish: to put sth. out of one’s mind: She could not banish her grief for her dead child. dispose: (with of) to get free (of sth. unwanted) by selling it, throwing it away or dealing with it in any way: If the box is empty, you can dispose of it. do away with: to put an end to (sth. old and useless): Such customs should be done away with. dump: to throw away (sth. large and unwanted): Where shall I dump this broken chair. get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. get rid of: free oneself of: How can I get rid of these unwelcome visitors?. stamp out: to put an end to (sth. dangerous or evil): We must stamp out this disease before it spreads. \ See Also طرد (طَرَدَ)، ألغى (أَلْغَى)، قَضَى على -
6 come through, get through, pass through
تَغَلَّبَ \ to get the better of: to get control of; win against: He got the better of his fears. come through, get through, pass through: to pass successfully (an exam, a dangerous or difficult position, etc.). get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. overcome: to deal successfully with (a fault or difficulty); conquer. \ See Also تَفَوّق علىArabic-English glossary > come through, get through, pass through
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7 to get the better of
تَغَلَّبَ \ to get the better of: to get control of; win against: He got the better of his fears. come through, get through, pass through: to pass successfully (an exam, a dangerous or difficult position, etc.). get over: to get better from (an illness); not feel any more (shock, surprise, etc.): She can’t get over the shock of her husband’s death. overcome: to deal successfully with (a fault or difficulty); conquer. \ See Also تَفَوّق على -
8 riavere
get back, regainho riavuto il raffreddore I've got another cold* * *riavere v.tr.1 to have again: oggi ha riavuto la febbre, he has had a high temperature again today; riebbe voglia di mangiare, he felt like eating again2 ( ricuperare) to get* back, to get* again, to recover: ho riavuto il mio denaro, I've got my money back; potè riavere il figlio, he could have his son back again; riavere la vista, l'udito, to recover one's sight, hearing; riavere il proprio impiego, to recover one's job3 ( ridare vitalità) to revive: la rugiada fece riavere i fiori, the dew revived the flowers; far riavere qlcu., to revive s.o.◘ riaversi v.intr.pron. to recover, to get* over (sthg.) (anche fig.); ( tornare in sé) to recover one's senses: riavere da una malattia, to recover from (o to get over) an illness; mi sono appena riavuto da una brutta notizia, I have just got over some bad news // riavere da un dissesto finanziario, to recover from bankruptcy.* * *1. [ria'vere]vb irreg vt1) (gen) to have again2) (recuperare: soldi, libro ecc) to get backfar riavere qn — (da svenimento) to bring sb round
2. vip (riaversi)(da svenimento, stordimento) to come round* * *[ria'vere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (avere di nuovo) to regain [vista, libertà]2) (avere indietro) to have* back, to get* back2.* * *riavere/ria'vere/ [5]1 (avere di nuovo) to regain [vista, libertà]2 (avere indietro) to have* back, to get* backII riaversi verbo pronominale -
9 überstehen
(hervorragen) to project;(überwinden) to get over; to survive* * *über|ste|hen [yːbɐ'ʃteːən] ptp übersta\#ndenvt insep irreg(= durchstehen) to come or get through; (= überleben) to survive; (= überwinden) to overcome; Unwetter to weather, to ride out; Krankheit to get over, to recover frometw lebend überstéhen — to survive sth, to come out of sth alive
* * *(to survive safely: The ship weathered the storm although she was badly damaged.) weather* * *über·ste·hen *1[y:bɐˈʃte:ən]▪ etw \überstehen to come [or get] through sthdie Belastung \überstehen to hold out under the stresseine Krankheit/Operation \überstehen to get over [or recover from] an illness/operationdie nächsten Tage \überstehen to live through [or live out sep] [or to last] the next few daysjetzt haben wir es überstanden (fam) thank heavens that's over nowüber|ste·hen2[ˈy:bɐʃte:ən]vi irreg Hilfsverb: haben o sein (herausragen) to jut [or stick] out, to project40 cm [weit] \überstehen to jut [or stick] out [or to project] [by] 40 cm* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb come through <danger, war, operation>; get over < illness>; withstand <heat, strain>; < boat> weather, ride out < storm>; (überleben) survive* * *über'stehen v/t (irr, untrennb, hat) (Krankheit, Not etc) get over, recover from; (Katastrophe etc, auch lebend überstehen) survive, come out of sth alive; (Strapaze) survive umg; (Sturm, Krise) weather, ride out;etwas überstanden haben umg have got sth over (and done) with;das wäre überstanden! umg that’s that (over and done with), that’s that out of the way;sie hat es überstanden euph (ist tot) she’s at rest now* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb come through <danger, war, operation>; get over < illness>; withstand <heat, strain>; < boat> weather, ride out < storm>; (überleben) survive* * *v.to survive v. -
10 durchstehen
* * *to stand; to prick* * *dụrch|ste|hen [dʊrç'ʃteːən] ['dʊrçʃteːən] sep [dʊrçʃtandn] [dʊrç'ʃteːən] ['dʊrçʃteːən] ptp durchsta\#nden [dʊrçʃtandn] insepvt irregZeit, Prüfung to get through; Krankheit to pull or come through, to get over; Tempo, Test, Qualen to (with)stand; Abenteuer to have; Schwierigkeiten, Situation to get through* * *durch|ste·hen[ˈdʊrçʃte:ən]▪ etw \durchstehen1. (ertragen) to get through sthQualen \durchstehen to endure great painsSchwierigkeiten \durchstehen to cope with difficulties2. (standhalten) to [with]stand sthdas Tempo \durchstehen to stand the pace, to hold out* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb stand <pace, boring job>; come through < adventure, difficult situation>; pass < test>; get over < illness>* * ** * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb stand <pace, boring job>; come through <adventure, difficult situation>; pass < test>; get over < illness>* * *v.to survive v. -
11 superare
"to overcome, to exceed;Überwinden;superar"* * *go pastfig overcomeesame pass* * *superare v.tr.1 ( oltrepassare, sorpassare) to go* over, to go* beyond, to exceed; to be over (sthg.); ( aspettative) to surpass, to exceed; ( riferito a persona) to surpass, to outdo*: l'allievo ha superato il maestro, the pupil surpassed his master; questa nave non supera i quindici nodi orari, this ship cannot exceed fifteen knots; il prezzo supera i duecento milioni, the price is over two hundred million; in Italia la produzione del grano supera quella del riso, wheat production exceeds rice production in Italy; il risultato ha superato tutte le nostre speranze, the outcome exceeded all our hopes; se non supera le dieci sterline, compralo pure, buy it if it is not over (o more than) ten pounds; merci che superano il peso consentito, overweight goods; la sua recitazione ha superato le mie aspettative, his performance exceeded my expectations; superò tutti i rivali, he outdid all his rivals; ormai ha superato l'età dei giochi, he has passed (o gone) beyond the age of playing games; la tua arroganza ha superato ogni limite, your arrogance has gone beyond the limit; superare il limite di velocità, to exceed the speed limit; superare in altezza, lunghezza, to be higher, longer (o to exceed in height, in length); superare in numero, in peso, to exceed in number, weight; superare in velocità, to exceed in speed (o to be faster): la mia auto supera in velocità qualunque altra, my car is faster than any other; superare qlcu. di x punti, ( durante la partita) to be x points ahead of s.o.; ( come risultato finale) to score x points more than s.o.; (econ.) superare l'offerta di qlcu., to improve up (o on) s.o.'s offer; superare qlcu. in qlco., to excel s.o. in (o at) sthg. (o to surpass s.o. in sthg.): lo supera in intelligenza, he surpasses him in intelligence; nello sport nessuno lo supera, nobody can beat him in sports activities // superare ogni primato, to break all records // superare se stesso, to surpass oneself2 ( passare al di là di) to get* over (sthg.); ( attraversare) to cross; ( oltrepassare con un veicolo) to overtake*, to pass: mi superò in curva, he overtook me on a bend; è vietato superare in curva, overtaking on a bend is forbidden; superare un fiume, un burrone, il confine, to cross a river, a ravine, the border; superare un muro, to get over a wall; superammo il paese e proseguimmo lungo la strada, we passed through the village and continued along the road; quando si superano gli 8000 metri, c'è bisogno di ossigeno, if you go above 8000 metres, you need oxygen3 ( vincere, sormontare) to overcome*, to surmount; to get* over (sthg.); ( passare) to get* through (sthg.), to pass: superare il primo turno, to get through the first leg; superare una difficoltà, un ostacolo, to overcome (o to surmount) a difficulty, an obstacle; superare un esame, to get through (o to pass) an examination; superare una malattia, to get over an illness; il malato ha superato la crisi, the patient has got over the critical phase; superare il nemico, to overcome the enemy; superare un pericolo, to overcome a danger; superare un periodo critico, to get over (o to overcome) a critical period; superare la prova, to pass the test.* * *[supe'rare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (essere maggiore di) to exceedsuperare qcs. in altezza, larghezza — to be taller, wider than sth.
superare qcn. di 5 centimetri — to be 5 centimetres taller than sb.
non dovrebbe superare la mezz'ora — it shouldn't take more than o exceed half an hour
2) (oltrepassare) to go* past [ luogo]; to cross, to clear [fossato, fiume, ponte, colle, frontiera, soglia]; fig. to get* through [ brutto periodo]; to get* over [ difficoltà]; to overcome* [ crisi]; to exceed [ aspettative]superare la quarantina — to be over o past forty
superare i limiti di velocità — to exceed o break the speed limit
3) (sorpassare) to pass, to overtake* BE [ veicolo]4) (essere superiore rispetto a) to be* ahead of, to outstrip, to surpasssuperare qcn. in crudeltà, stupidità — to be crueller, more stupid than sb., to surpass sb. in cruelty, stupidity
5) scol. univ. to get* through, to pass [ esame]2.* * *superare/supe'rare/ [1]1 (essere maggiore di) to exceed; superare qcs. in altezza, larghezza to be taller, wider than sth.; superare qcn. di 5 centimetri to be 5 centimetres taller than sb.; certe classi superano i 30 allievi some classes have over 30 pupils; non dovrebbe superare la mezz'ora it shouldn't take more than o exceed half an hour2 (oltrepassare) to go* past [ luogo]; to cross, to clear [fossato, fiume, ponte, colle, frontiera, soglia]; fig. to get* through [ brutto periodo]; to get* over [ difficoltà]; to overcome* [ crisi]; to exceed [ aspettative]; superare un ostacolo to clear a hurdle (anche fig.); superare il traguardo to cross the (finishing) line; superare la quarantina to be over o past forty; superare i limiti di velocità to exceed o break the speed limit; superare i limiti to go too far4 (essere superiore rispetto a) to be* ahead of, to outstrip, to surpass; superare qcn. in crudeltà, stupidità to be crueller, more stupid than sb., to surpass sb. in cruelty, stupidity5 scol. univ. to get* through, to pass [ esame]II superarsi verbo pronominale(se stesso) to surpass oneself. -
12 guarire
1. v/t cure2. v/i recoverdi ferita heal* * *guarire v. intr.1 to recover, to recover one's health; (rimarginare) to heal: guarì molto rapidamente, he recovered very quickly; la ferita guarì quasi miracolosamente, the wound healed almost miraculously; potrà guarire da quella malattia?, will he be able to recover from (o to get over) that illness?; ti trovo bene, sei guarito finalmente, you look well, you've finally got over your illness; ho avuto una brutta influenza, ma adesso sono guarito, I had a bad bout of flu but now I'm feeling better2 (fig.) to get* out (of sthg.), to fall* out (of sthg.): guarire da una cattiva abitudine, to get out (o to get rid) of a bad habit◆ v.tr.1 to cure, to restore to health; (far rimarginare) to heal: guarì la mia polmonite, he cured my pneumonia; mi guarì dalla polmonite, he cured me of pneumonia2 (fig.) to cure, to heal, to free: ti guarirò da quell'ossessione, I shall cure you of (o shall free you from) that obsession; guarire qlcu. da un'abitudine, to cure (o to break) s.o. of a habit; guarire i mali della nostra civiltà, to cure the ills of our civilization.* * *[ɡwa'rire]1. vt2. vi* * *[gwa'rire] 1.verbo transitivo1) [medico, cura] to cure [persona, malattia] (da of); to heal [ ferita]2) fig. (liberare)2.guarire qcn. da — to cure sb. of [vizio, abitudine]
verbo intransitivo (aus. essere) [persona, animale] to recover, to get* well (da from); [frattura, ferita] to heal* * *guarire/gwa'rire/ [102]1 [medico, cura] to cure [persona, malattia] (da of); to heal [ ferita](aus. essere) [persona, animale] to recover, to get* well (da from); [frattura, ferita] to heal; guarisci presto! get well soon! -
13 chor|oba
Ⅰ f 1. (zły stan zdrowia) illness U, sickness U; (schorzenie) illness U, disease C/U; (dolegliwość) complaint; (zaburzenie) disorder C/U- choroba skóry a. skórna a skin disease- choroba nerwowa a nervous illness a. disease- choroba wrodzona a. dziedziczna a hereditary disease- choroba zakaźna an infectious disease- choroba gardła a throat condition- choroba nowotworowa cancer- choroba oczu an eye disease a. disorder- choroba serca a heart disease a. condition- choroba wątroby a liver disease a. complaint- przewlekła/nieuleczalna/śmiertelna choroba a chronic/an incurable/a fatal illness a. disease- nawrót choroby a relapse- źródło a. ognisko choroby the source of an illness a. disease- być podatnym na chorobę to be prone to illness- być przeżartym chorobą to be riddled with disease- być złożonym chorobą to be bedridden- cierpieć na chorobę to suffer from a disease- nabawić się choroby to come down with an illness- pielęgnować kogoś w chorobie to nurse sb a. look after sb during an illness- przebyć chorobę to get over an illness- symulować chorobę to malinger- umrzeć na chorobę to die of a disease- zarazić się chorobą to catch a disease- zapaść na cieżką chorobę to come down with a serious illness- choroba pozbawiła go słuchu/wzroku the disease deprived him of his hearing/sight- historia chory Med. medical record, case history2. przen. (negatywne zjawisko) disease C/U, malady Ⅱ inter. pot. euf. (przekleństwo) heck pot., euf.; sugar euf.- choroba, gdzie ja to położyłem? where the heck did I put it?- o choroba, nie wziąłem kluczyków oh heck a. sugar, I didn’t take my keys- na a. po chorobę ci to? what the heck do you need that for?- do jasnej/ciężkiej choroby bloody hell! posp.- choroba górska (wysokościowa) altitude sickness, mountain sickness- choroba Heinego-Medina polio(myelitis)- choroba kawalerska przest., euf. syphilis- choroba kesonowa Med decompression sickness, caisson disease- choroba kiełbasiana Med. botulism- choroba krwotoczna noworodków Med. haemolytic disease of newborn infants- choroba lokomocyjna Med. travel-sickness, motion sickness- choroba morska seasickness- choroba motylicza Med., Wet. distomiasis, (liver) rot- choroba mozaikowa Bot. mosaic (disease)- choroba odzwierzęca Med. zoonosis- choroba papuzia Med. parrot fever- choroba Parkinsona Med. Parkinson’s disease- choroba popromienna Med. radiation sickness- choroba przestrzeni Psych. agoraphobia- choroba reumatyczna Med. rheumatoid a. rheumatic disease, rheumatism- choroba społeczna Med. social disease- choroba św. Wita przest., Med. St. Vitus’s dance przest.; Sydenham’s chorea- choroba tropikalna Med. tropical disease- choroba weneryczna Med. venereal disease- choroba wewnętrzna Med. internal disease- choroba wieńcowa Med. coronary disease- choroba wrzodowa Med. peptic ulcer- choroba zawodowa Med. industrial disease, occupational disease- choroby tropiczne przest. Med. tropical diseases- choroba cukrowa przest. Med. (sugar) diabetes, sugar disease- choroba szpitalna a. hospitalizacyjna Med. psychological illness resulting from prolonged institutionalization- francuska choroba przest. venereal disease, syphilis- ostra choroba acute disease- wstydliwa choroba przest., euf. VD- choroba Alzheimera Med. Alzheimer’s disease- choroba bornaska Wet. horse sickness- angielska choroba przest., Med. the English disease; rickets- choroba Burgera Med. Buerger’s disease■ być na chorobie pot. to be off sick- każda choroba ma swoje lekarstwo przysł. there’s more than one way to skin a catThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > chor|oba
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14 onmak
1. to improve, get better. 2. to get over an illness, get well. 3. to find happiness, find inner peace. -
15 savmak
"to send away, to turn away; to get rid of; to avoid, to escape; to get over (an illness)" -
16 оправиться после болезни
1) General subject: be about, be on one's feet, be oneself again, to be on ( one's) feet2) Makarov: be up and about, get over an illnessУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > оправиться после болезни
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17 a părăsi patul
to get over an illnessto recoverto be up againto leave one's bed. -
18 hinter
I Präp.1. (+ Dat) behind, at the back of; NAUT. aft of, astern of; (nach) after; hinter... her behind...; hinter... hervor from behind...; hinter meinem Rücken auch fig. behind my back; einer hinter dem anderen one behind the other; sie kommt gleich hinter mir she is right behind me; zehn Kilometer hinter Köln / der Grenze ten kilomet|res (Am. -ers) after Cologne / beyond the border; hinter sich lassen (Ort etc.) leave behind; (jemanden) in Wettrennen etc.: leave behind, outdistance; fig. (übertreffen) leave behind, outstrip3. (+ Dat) zeitlich: weit zurückreichen hinter go way back to before; zehn Minuten hinter der Zeit sein Dial. be ten minutes late4. fig.: hinter etw. (Akk) kommen find out about s.th., find s.th. out; (verstehen) get the hang of; hinter jemandem/etw. her sein be after s.o./s.th.; hinter etw. (Dat) stecken be at the bottom of ( oder behind); hinter etw. (Dat) stehen be behind; (unterstützen) auch back; sich hinter jemanden/etw. stellen get behind, support; hinter sich (Akk) bringen get s.th. over (and done) with; (Strecke) cover; jemanden hinter sich (Dat) haben have s.o. behind one; etw. hinter sich (Dat) haben (erledigt haben) have got s.th. out of the way ( oder over [and done] with); (mitgemacht haben) have been through s.th.; viel hinter sich (Dat) haben have been through a lot; er hat gerade eine Niereninfektion hinter sich he’s just got over a kidney infection; das Schlimmste haben wir hinter uns we’ve got over the worst part (of it), we’re out of the wood(s) now; sich hinter etw. (Akk) machen get down to; nicht zurückstehen hinter (+ Dat) be just as good as; zurückstehen müssen hinter (+ Dat) have to take second place to; Person: auch have to play second fiddle to; dahinter* * *behind of (Präp.); hind (Adj.); abaft (Präp.); at the back of (Präp.); after (Präp.); behind (Präp.); posterior (Adj.); rearward (Adj.); rear (Adj.); back (Adj.)* * *hịn|ter ['hɪntɐ]1) (räumlich) behindhinter jdm/etw her — behind sb/sth
hinter die Wahrheit kommen — to get to the truth
sich hinter jdn stellen (lit) — to stand behind sb; (fig) to support sb, to get behind sb
haben (lit, fig) — to have sb behind one
hinter dem Hügel/der Tür hervor — (out) from behind the hill/door
hinter seinen Reden steckt nicht viel — there's not much in his speeches
2) +dat (= nach) aftervier Kilometer hinter Glasgow/hinter der Grenze — four kilometres (Brit) or kilometers (US) outside Glasgow/beyond the border
hinter diesem Satz steht ein Fragezeichen — there is a question mark at the end of this sentence
er ist hinter mir dran — it's his turn after me
an Talent nicht hinter jdm zurückstehen — to be just as talented as sb
sie stand nicht hinter ihm zurück — she did not lag behind him
ich stelle das Privatleben hinter der Arbeit zurück — I put my work before my private life
4)das Schlimmste haben wir hinter uns — we're past the worst, we are over the worst
See:→ her sein5)See:= dahinter* * *1) (behind: Shut the door after you!) after2) ((American) behind: He parked back of the store.) back of3) (at or towards the back of: behind the door.) behind4) (remaining after: The tourists left their litter behind them.) behind5) posterior* * *hin·ter[ˈhɪntɐ]jdn \hinter sich haben (fig) to have sb's backing [or support]\hinter jdm hergehen/herlaufen to walk/run behind sb\hinter etw hervortreten to step out from behind sthjdn/etw \hinter sich lassen to leave sb/sth behind\hinter dem Lenkrad sitzen to be at the wheel\hinter jdm stehen (fig) to be behind sb, to back [or support] sb\hinter etw stehen (fig) to support stheine Strecke \hinter sich haben to have come/gone a distancedie Tür \hinter sich schließen to close the door behind [or after] one2. (am Ende) at the end of3. (jenseits) beyondder nächste Halt \hinter Kamen the next stop after Kamen\hinter dem Berg on the other side of the mountain\hinter der Grenze on the other side of [or beyond] the border4. (außerhalb)zehn Kilometer \hinter Berlin machten wir eine Pause ten kilometres out of Berlin we had a break\hinter den Anforderungen zurückbleiben to not live up to requirements\hinter der Entwicklung zurückbleiben to be underdeveloped\hinter den Erwartungen zurückbleiben to not live up to [or fall short of] expectations/requirementsjdn/etw [weit] \hinter sich lassen to leave sb/sth in the dust\hinter der Zeit zurückbleiben to be behind the times\hinter jdm zurückstehen to lag behind sb6. (als erlebt)eine Arbeit \hinter sich haben to have got a job over [and done] witheine Enttäuschung \hinter sich haben to have got over a disappointmentviele Enttäuschungen \hinter sich haben to have had [or experienced] many disappointmentseine Krankheit \hinter sich haben to have got over an illness; (ernsthaft a.) to have pulled through [or BRIT also round]das Studium \hinter sich haben to have finished [or completed] one's studiesetw liegt [weit] \hinter jdm sb has [long] got over sth7. (nach) after5 Minuten hinter der Zeit DIAL 5 minutes late\hinter jdm an die Reihe kommen to come after sb8. (als Ursache) behind9. (verstellt als) behind, beneath10.▶ \hinter jdm/etw her sein to be after sb/sth1. (auf die Rückseite) behind\hinter etw fallen to fall behind [or down the back of] sth2. (ans Ende) afterein Punkt wird immer \hinter einen Satz gesetzt a sentence always ends in a full stop4. (als erlebt)etw \hinter sich bringen to get sth over [and done] with5. (vorher)\hinter etw gehen [o reichen] to go [or reach] back to before sthdie Probleme reichten bis \hinter den 2. Weltkrieg zurück the problems reached back to pre-war days [or to before the war6. (entlarvt)\hinter etw kommen to find out about sth; Rätsel to get to the bottom of sth\hinter die Wahrheit kommen to get to the truther ging \hinter in den Garten he went out into the garden* * *1.1) behindhinter dem Haus — behind or at the back of the house
hinter jemandem stehen — (fig.) be behind somebody; back or support somebody
hinter etwas (Dat.) stehen — (fig.) support something
jemanden hinter sich haben — (fig.) have somebody's backing
die nächste Station hinter Mannheim — the next stop after Mannheim
hinter der Entwicklung/der Zeit zurückbleiben — lag behind in development/be behind in times
er ist hinter unseren Erwartungen zurückgeblieben — he has fallen short of our expectations
2)eine Prüfung/Aufgabe hinter sich haben — (fig.) have got an examination/a job over [and done] with
2.viele Enttäuschungen/eine Krankheit hinter sich haben — have experienced many disappointments/have got over an illness
1) behind2)etwas hinter sich bringen — get something over [and done] with
3) (fig.)hinter ein Geheimnis/die Wahrheit/seine Geschichte kommen — find out a secret/get to the truth/get to the bottom of his story
* * *A. präphinter … her behind …;hinter … hervor from behind …;hinter meinem Rücken auch fig behind my back;einer hinter dem anderen one behind the other;sie kommt gleich hinter mir she is right behind me;zehn Kilometer hinter Köln/der Grenze ten kilometres (US -ers) after Cologne/beyond the border;hinter sich lassen (Ort etc) leave behind; (jemanden) in Wettrennen etc: leave behind, outdistance; fig (übertreffen) leave behind, outstrip2. (+akk) behind;hinter das Haus gehen go behind the house;sieh hinter dich! look behind you!3. (+dat) zeitlich:weit zurückreichen hinter go way back to before;zehn Minuten hinter der Zeit sein dial be ten minutes late4. fig:hinter etwas (akk)hinter jemandem/etwasher sein be after sb/sth;hinter etwas (dat)hinter etwas (dat)stehen be behind; (unterstützen) auch back;sich hinter jemanden/etwasstellen get behind, support;hinter sich (akk)jemanden hinter sich (dat)haben have sb behind one;etwas hinter sich (dat)haben (erledigt haben) have got sth out of the way ( oder over [and done] with); (mitgemacht haben) have been through sth;viel hinter sich (dat)haben have been through a lot;er hat gerade eine Niereninfektion hinter sich he’s just got over a kidney infection;das Schlimmste haben wir hinter uns we’ve got over the worst part (of it), we’re out of the wood(s) now;sich hinter etwas (akk)machen get down to;nicht zurückstehen hinter (+dat) be just as good as;zurückstehen müssen hinter (+dat) have to take second place to; Person: auch have to play second fiddle to; → dahinterhinter…1 adj; nur attr; rear, back; Beine, Hufe, Pfoten etc: hind; SCHIFF, Luke etc: aft; fachspr posterior;hinteres Ende far end;die hinteren Bänke the back benches;die hinteren Wagen BAHN the rear coaches;hinter…2 im v; trennb; besonders südd, österr umg2. → hinunter…* * *1.1) behindhinter dem Haus — behind or at the back of the house
hinter jemandem stehen — (fig.) be behind somebody; back or support somebody
hinter etwas (Dat.) stehen — (fig.) support something
jemanden hinter sich haben — (fig.) have somebody's backing
hinter der Entwicklung/der Zeit zurückbleiben — lag behind in development/be behind in times
2)eine Prüfung/Aufgabe hinter sich haben — (fig.) have got an examination/a job over [and done] with
2.viele Enttäuschungen/eine Krankheit hinter sich haben — have experienced many disappointments/have got over an illness
1) behind2)etwas hinter sich bringen — get something over [and done] with
3) (fig.)hinter ein Geheimnis/die Wahrheit/seine Geschichte kommen — find out a secret/get to the truth/get to the bottom of his story
* * *präp.abaft prep.behind prep.rearward adj., adv. -
19 komme
4приходи́ть; приезжа́ть; прибыва́тьkómme gående — прийти́ пешко́м
kómme kǿrende — прие́хать
kómme for sent — опозда́ть
hvordán kómmer jeg til...? — как мне пройти́ к...?
kómme af (med ngn, ngt) — отде́лываться, избавля́ться от кого́-л., чего́-л.
kómme igén — возвраща́ться
kómme ind ; kom ind! — войди́те!
kómme sámmen — обща́ться
kómme ved — каса́ться, име́ть отноше́ние
det kómmer ud på ét — всё равно́, безразли́чно
* * *advent, arrive, come, get, put* * *I. (et)( nærmen sig) approach ( fx the approach of night (, winter));( ankomst) coming ( fx the coming of winter), arrival.II. vb (kom, kommet)( især: hen til den talende, til det sted man tænker på) come ( fx come here! come to my house; are you coming to the dance?);( nå frem; blive hensat i) get ( fx get to London, get home, he got here at last; get into a better temper),( ankomme) arrive ( fx the guests will arrive soon; arrive in London(, at a place)),( komme på besøg) call;( hælde) pour;( smøre) spread ( fx glue (, paint) on something);[ forskellige forbindelser:][ nu kommer jeg!] coming![ komme nærmere] approach, come (, get) closer;(se også nærme sig);[ kom så da!] come on![ med sig:][ komme sig] improve,T pick up,( blive rask) recover, get well;[ komme sig af] recover from ( fx an illness, a shock, a surprise), get over ( fx an illness, a disappointment, a shock, a surprise);(dvs bliver kvikkere) you are coming on!(se også kommende);[ med præp og adv:][ komme `af](mar: komme af grunden) come off, get off;[` komme af]( skyldes) come from, be due to,( nedstamme fra) come of,( om ord: afledes af) be derived from;[ hvoraf kommer dette?] why is this?[ komme af med] get rid of;[ kom an!] come on![ komme an på] depend on ( fx it depends on the weather);(dvs afhænger af omstændighederne) that depends;[ det er karakteren det kommer an på] it's the character that matters (el.counts);[ det kommer an på dig] it depends on you, it is up to you;[ komme bag på én] take somebody by surprise;[ komme bort] get off, get away,(om brev etc også) go astray;[ komme bort fra] get away from;( utilsigtet) stray from ( fx the subject);(dvs benægte) there is no denying it;[ komme efter](dvs følge på) follow, succeed, come after,( komme for at hente) come for, call for;(dvs opdage) find out, get on to,( lære) pick up;[ jeg skal komme efter ham!] I'll be after him!( om sag) come on;[ komme foran] get in front,(ved konkurrence etc) get ahead, take the lead;[ komme forbi] pass (by);( slippe forbi) get past;[` komme fra] come from ( fx Germany, the working class);(dvs et arbejde) he made a good job of it,( ulykke) he escaped unhurt,( vovestykke) he got away with it;[ det var det jeg kom fra] as I was saying; as I was going to say;(se også levende);[ komme frem] come out, appear,( komme videre) get on;( bane sig vej) make one's way,( i verden) get on, rise;( til bestemmelsessted) get through, get there;( røbes) be revealed, become known;[ jeg kunne hverken komme frem eller tilbage] I was stuck;[ komme frem af] emerge from;[ komme frem med] put forward,T come up with ( fx a plan, a suggestion),( afsløre, F) disclose;[ komme fri](af lænker etc) get free;( hvis man sidder fast) get loose;( i fodbold) get clear;[ komme fri af] get loose from,F disengage (el. extricate) oneself from;[ komme hen til] come up to;[ komme hos Smith] be often at the Smiths,F be a frequent guest at Smith's;[ komme i avisen] get into the papers;[ komme i himlen] go to heaven;[ komme i mål], se ndf: komme ind;[ komme i tre oplag (, udgaver)] run into three printings (, editions);[ komme igen] come back, return,( betale sig) pay in time;[ jeg kommer igen en anden gang] I'll call again (another time);[ komme igennem] get through; pass;[ komme igennem med et forslag] get (el. carry el. put) a proposal through;[ komme ind] enter; come (, get) in ( fx come in! we couldn't get in);( om tog) come in, arrive;(fig: i diskussion) come in;( i sport) get in, finish ( fx he finished third);[ komme ind i] enter;( sætte sig ind i) acquaint oneself with;( i samtale) get on to a subject;( berøre) touch on a subject;[ komme nærmere ind på sagen] go into detail;(dvs blive taget med) be included,( slutte sig til andre) join;[` komme med](dvs bringe) bring ( fx the milkman brings milk every day);( fremkomme med) come up with ( fx the right answer, a solution);( ytre) make ( fx a remark; make rude remarks about, make no protest), say ( fx a few words),F utter ( fx protests);[ komme med en forklaring] give an explanation;[ han kom ikke med nogen forklaring] he offered no explanation;[ komme om ved](også fig) get around;[( søge at) komme nemt om ved det] cut a corner; cut corners;[ komme op] get up;( om planter) come up;( om teaterstykke) be put on;[ komme op at skændes] quarrel;[ komme op at slås] come to blows;[ komme op i et fag] be examined in a subject;(se også år);[ komme op på et stort tal] reach a big figure;(se også side);[ komme ovenpå], se ovenpå;[ komme over]( passere) get over ( fx the road, a wall),(fig: overvinde) get over ( fx a difficulty),F overcome, surmount ( fx a difficulty);( komme sig af) get over, recover from ( fx an illness, a shock; he'll soon get over it);( om stemning: gribe) come over ( fx a feeling of hopelessness came over us; what has come over him?);(se også ånd);[ komme overens], se overens;[ komme `på]( blive trykt i blad) be put in;( erindre) think of, remember;[` komme på][ komme på holdet] be included in (el. selected for el. put on) the team;[ jeg kan ikke komme på navnet] I can't think of the name, the name escapes me;[ hvordan kommer du dog på det?] what made you think of that? how did you get that idea?[ komme sammen] meet, come together;( omgås) see each other,F associate with each other;( om par) go out;( omgås) see,F associate with,( om par) go out with,T date ( fx he is going out with (, dating) Vera);( også) he has got a girl friend;[ komme til] come to, arrive at ( fx a place),(se også tur);( erhverve) come by ( fx how did you come by that money?),F obtain;[ der kom andre ` til] they were joined by others,( overraskende) others turned up;[ lad mig komme ` til!] let me (have a go)![ komme til middag (, te etc)] come to dinner (, tea etc);[ komme til penge] come by some money,( ved arv) come into money;( tilfældigt) happen to do something, chance to do something,( uheldigvis) do something by accident;( efterhånden) come (el. get) to do something ( fx I had come (el.got) to hate him);( i fremtiden) will do something ( fx the prices will be higher),( nødvendigvis) will have to do something ( fx you will have to change it);[ han kom til at sige at] he chanced to say that, by mistake he said that,( røbede) he blurted out that;[ han kom aldrig til at se hende mere] he never saw her again;F he was never to see her again;[ når alt kommer til alt] after all;[ når han kan komme til det] when he has a chance;[ det kom til forsoning (, til slag)] there was a reconciliation (, a battle);[ komme noget til] get hurt, be injured;( fatte sig) recover,( efter bevidstløshed) come round, come to oneself;[ komme tilbage] get (, come) back, return;[ komme ud] come out, get out,(se også II. udkomme);( i lotteri) his number came up;[ han kommer meget ud] he goes out a great deal;[ der kom intet ud af planen] the plan came to nothing; nothing came of the plan;[ der kom ikke ret meget ud af det] it did not come to much;(se også sted);[ hvad skal der komme ud af dette?] how is this going to end?[ komme ud af det med] get on with;(se også ud);[ komme ud for] meet with ( fx an accident, criticism, opposition);[nummeret er kommet ud med £500] the number has won £500;( klare) manage;[ komme ud på ét] come to the same thing; be all one;(dvs benægte) there is no denying it (el. getting round it);[ man kan ikke komme uden om at] one cannot ignore that, there is no getting away from the fact that, there is no denying that;[ komme hinanden ved] care about each other;( betyde noget for) matter to each other;[ hvad kommer det dig ved?] what business (el. concern) is that of yours?[ det kommer ikke dig ved] it is no business (el. concern) of yours, it is none of your business;[ det kommer ikke sagen ved], se sag. -
20 curar
v.1 to cure.El médico curó a Ilse The doctor cured Ilse.El amor cura la tristeza Love remedies loneliness.Ricardo curó las tiras de puerco Richard cured the pork strips.2 to dress (herida).3 to cure (alimentos).4 to tan (pieles).5 to get well, to recover (enfermo).6 to heal.La pomada curó la herida The ointment healed the wound.7 to audit.Los reguladores curaron a la empresa The regulators audited the company.* * *1 (sanar) to cure2 (herida) to dress; (enfermedad) to treat1 (cuidar) to take care (de, of)2 (recuperarse) to recover, get well3 (herida) to heal (up)1 (recuperarse) to recover (de, from), get well2 (herida) to heal up\curar un mal figurado to right a wrongcurarse en salud figurado to take precautions* * *verb1) to cure2) heal* * *1. VT1) (Med) (=tratar) to treat; (=sanar) to curele curó la herida con alcohol — she treated o dressed his wound with alcohol
para curar los males de la sociedad — (fig) to cure all of society's ills
2) [+ carne, pescado] to cure; [+ queso] to mature; [+ piel] to tan; [+ tela] to bleach; [+ madera] to season2.VI (Med) [fármaco, medicamento] to work; frm [paciente] to get better, recover3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( poner bien) <enfermo/enfermedad> to cure; < herida> to healb) ( tratar) <enfermo/enfermedad> to treatno le han curado la herida — his wound hasn't been cleaned/dressed
2) <jamón/pescado> to cure; <cuero/piel> to tan2.3.una vez curado de la enfermedad... — once he has/had recovered from his illness...
* * *= cure, heal, treat.Ex. If static is a problem, it can usually be cured by the use of an anti-static mat and regular applications of anti-static sprays, both available from accessory suppliers.Ex. The article is entitled 'Books can help heal! Innovative techniques of bibliotherapy'.Ex. The author studies the factors which have impeded the spread of information on the use of thioctic acid to treat mushroom poisoning.----* con otra copa de lo mismo se te cura la resaca = a hair of the dog that bit you.* curar alimentos = cure + food.* curar carne = cure + meat.* curarse en salud = be on the safe side.* lo que a uno cura a otro mata = one man's meat is another man's poison.* más vale prevenir que curar = a stitch in time saves nine, better (to be) safe than sorry.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) ( poner bien) <enfermo/enfermedad> to cure; < herida> to healb) ( tratar) <enfermo/enfermedad> to treatno le han curado la herida — his wound hasn't been cleaned/dressed
2) <jamón/pescado> to cure; <cuero/piel> to tan2.3.una vez curado de la enfermedad... — once he has/had recovered from his illness...
* * *= cure, heal, treat.Ex: If static is a problem, it can usually be cured by the use of an anti-static mat and regular applications of anti-static sprays, both available from accessory suppliers.
Ex: The article is entitled 'Books can help heal! Innovative techniques of bibliotherapy'.Ex: The author studies the factors which have impeded the spread of information on the use of thioctic acid to treat mushroom poisoning.* con otra copa de lo mismo se te cura la resaca = a hair of the dog that bit you.* curar alimentos = cure + food.* curar carne = cure + meat.* curarse en salud = be on the safe side.* lo que a uno cura a otro mata = one man's meat is another man's poison.* más vale prevenir que curar = a stitch in time saves nine, better (to be) safe than sorry.* * *curar [A1 ]vtA1 (poner bien) ‹enfermo/enfermedad› to cure; ‹herida› to heal2 (tratar) ‹enfermo/enfermedad› to treatno le habían curado la herida his wound hadn't been cleaned/dressedB ‹jamón/pescado› to cure; ‹cuero/piel› to tan■ curarvi«enfermo» to recover, get better; «herida» to heal, heal up curar DE algo:una vez curado de la enfermedad … once he has/had recovered from his illness …, once over his illness …tiene una gripe mal curada he hasn't got(ten) rid of o completely shaken off his flu yet■ curarseA «persona» to recover, get better; «enfermedad» to get better curarse DE algo to get over sth salud* * *
curar ( conjugate curar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ herida› to heal
‹ herida› ( desinfectar) to clean;
( vendar) to dress
2 ‹jamón/pescado› to cure;
‹cuero/piel› to tan
curarse verbo pronominal [ enfermo] to recover, get better;
[ herida] to heal up;
curarse de algo to get over sth
curar
I verbo transitivo
1 (a un enfermo) to cure
2 (vendar, desinfectar) to dress
3 (carne, pescado) to cure
II verbo intransitivo & verbo reflexivo curar(se) (hacerse una cura) to heal (up)
(recuperarse) to recover, get well
' curar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
prevenir
- sanar
- adobar
- herida
- panceta
English:
cure
- heal
- safe
- season
* * *♦ vt1. [sanar] to cure2. [herida] [tratar] to treat;[con vendas] to dress3. [alimentos] to cure4. [pieles] to tan5. RP [mate] to cure, to season [before using for the first time]♦ vi[enfermo] to get well, to recover; [herida] to heal up* * *I v/t1 tbGASTR cure3 pieles tan* * *curar vt1) : to cure, to heal2) : to treat, to dress3) curtir: to tan4) : to cure (meat)curar vi: to get well, to recover* * *curar vb1. (sanar) to cure2. (tratar) to treat3. (herida) to dress
См. также в других словарях:
get over — verb 1. travel across or pass over (Freq. 4) The caravan covered almost 100 miles each day • Syn: ↑traverse, ↑track, ↑cover, ↑cross, ↑pass over, ↑get across, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
get over — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms get over : present tense I/you/we/they get over he/she/it gets over present participle getting over past tense got over past participle got over 1) a) get over something to start to feel happy or well again… … English dictionary
ˌget ˈover sth — phrasal verb 1) to start to feel happy or well again after something bad has happened to you It can take weeks to get over an illness like that.[/ex] Don s pretty upset, but he ll get over it.[/ex] 2) can t get over sth used for saying that you… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
get over somebody — ˌget ˈover sth/sb derived to return to your usual state of health, happiness, etc. after an illness, a shock, the end of a relationship, etc • He was disappointed at not getting the job, but he ll get over it. Main entry: ↑getderived … Useful english dictionary
get over — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you get over an unpleasant or unhappy experience or an illness, you recover from it. [V P n] It took me a very long time to get over the shock of her death. 2) PHRASAL VERB If you get over a problem or difficulty, you overcome… … English dictionary
get over — {v.} 1. To finish. * /Tom worked fast to get his lesson over./ 2. To pass over. * /It was hard to get over the muddy road./ 3. To get well from; recover from. * /The man returned to work after he got over his illness./ 4. To accept or forget (a… … Dictionary of American idioms
get over — {v.} 1. To finish. * /Tom worked fast to get his lesson over./ 2. To pass over. * /It was hard to get over the muddy road./ 3. To get well from; recover from. * /The man returned to work after he got over his illness./ 4. To accept or forget (a… … Dictionary of American idioms
get\ over — v 1. To finish. Tom worked fast to get his lesson over. 2. To pass over. It was hard to get over the muddy road. 3. To get well from; recover from. The man returned to work after he got over his illness. 4. To accept or forget (a sorrow or… … Словарь американских идиом
get over — (smth) overcome a difficulty, recover from an illness or shock She has been having a lot of trouble getting over her father s death … Idioms and examples
get — [ get ] (past tense got [ gat ] ; past participle gotten [ gatn ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 obtain/receive ▸ 2 become/start to be ▸ 3 do something/have something done ▸ 4 move to/from ▸ 5 progress in activity ▸ 6 fit/put something in a place ▸ 7 understand… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
get — [c]/gɛt / (say get) verb (got, got or, Chiefly US, gotten, Archaic, gat, getting) –verb (t) 1. to obtain, gain, or acquire by any means: to get favour by service; get a good price. 2. to fetch or bring: I w …